Fear and anxiety are a large part of eating disorders. Fear of food and gaining weight, or not being able to purge or exercise, etc, are the key hallmarks of the disease. A lot of recovery means unlearning those fears.

And it ain't easy.

Yet experiments have shown that in patients with OCD, a form of cognitive behavioral therapy called exposure and response prevention can physically change the brain (Adobe Acrobat required to view the link). The fears of OCD, though biologically driven, are also learned in some sense. They aren't innate, and the rituals and habits of the illness often ingrains them in the brain- literally. The brains of people with OCD look different than the brains of people who don't have the illness.

So if these fears are learned, then, they should be able to be unlearned. Which is not only true, but also leads to changes in the brain.

The behavioral changes observed in the mice squelched anxiety as effectively as antidepressant drugs such as Prozac, said [lead investigator] Eric Kandel, who is at Columbia University. 'It's a little bit like psychotherapy,' he noted. 'This shows that behavioral intervention works.'

The new study is noteworthy because it reveals in elegant detail how behavioral conditioning can affect the brain. According to Kandel, knowing how behavioral intervention works at the molecular and cellular levels may prove to be an interesting route to identifying novel drugs to treat depression and anxiety disorders.

Intriguingly, genetic analyses revealed that in the amygdala, the brain's fear center, learned safety tunes the expression of key components of the dopamine neurotransmitter system and the neuropeptide system. Both systems are thought to influence learning, mood, and cognition.

The point of the study is not about drug discovery, at least not to me. Rather, I think it shows how powerful and important it is to learn how to eat without fear. Moving through those fears is so powerful that it can literally change your brain.

4 comments:

This is really great info Carrie. Many situations can create patterns where thoughts literally get stuck and the best way out is by learning our new escape routes. CBT is a much better option than sitting around chewing on why one is feeling so crappy, so scared, or stuck forever with a sickness. It's amazing what one small change can begin. A whole new way of life. ; ) It can get better....way better. Believe it!

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I'm a science writer, a jewelry design artist, a bookworm, a complete geek, and mom to a wonderful kitty. I am also recovering from a decade-plus battle with anorexia nervosa. I believe that complete recovery is possible, and that the first step along that path is full nutrition.